Undefeated UTSA improves to 7-0 after three-game series sweep of Dallas Baptist

Kendall Dove allowed one run in five innings to earn the victory Sunday as UTSA swept three games from Dallas Baptist. – Courtesy photo from UTSA athletics

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Josh Arquette stroked two hits and produced three RBIs Sunday as undefeated and record-setting UTSA downed the Dallas Baptist Patriots 6-3 to sweep a three-game series between mid-major powers in college baseball.

A crowd of 1,049 at Roadrunner Field watched as UTSA improved to 7-0, the best record after seven games in program history. Another record was set with 3,048 in attendance for the three games.

Roadrunners starter Kendall Dove started and worked five innings, giving up only one run on five hits, to earn the victory.

Reliever Gunnar Brown, making his second appearance in two days, was almost as effective in pitching the last four innings for the save.

He yielded two runs on five hits, a day after UTSA’s 10-8 victory, in which he earned the win in 2/3 of an inning.

A bit of drama unfolded in the last inning Sunday when Brown issued one-out walks to Jake Bennett and Ben Tryon, who both later advanced on a wild pitch.

With runners at second and third, Brown responded by striking out Chayton Krauss on a check swing. Finally, he retired slugger Ryan Martin on a long fly ball to right field to end it.

UTSA coach Pat Hallmark praised his players for evolving into “a complete team” in winning the finale against the Patriots, who fell to 4-3.

“We looked like a very good baseball team today” he said. “We pitched it. We put together grown-up bats versus good pitching in conditions that were not conducive to hitting.

“We played good defense. We ran the bases (well). It was a just a very complete game. It’s one that’ll make a coach pleased.”

Hallmark raised an eyebrow when he was asked what it means to start the season 7-0.

“It means we’re OK,” he said. “It means we got a decent team. But, again, we want to improve. We’re always looking forward …. We’re looking to improve, but 7-0 is better than anything else.”

After winning seven straight at home by a combined score of 81-32, the Roadrunners play their first road game Tuesday night in San Marcos against the I-35 rival Texas State Bobcats.

“(They are) a good team and they’re good fans,” Hallmark said. “They love their team, and they mostly hate UTSA, and that’s OK. That’s what fans are supposed to do.”

On a cool afternoon with fans wearing jackets and sweatshirts and a stiff wind blowing into the hitters’ faces, the Roadrunners jumped on the Patriots in the bottom of the first.

They scored three runs on three hits, two walks and a wild pitch by Patriots starter Ryan Borberg.

With the bases loaded and only one out, Arquette bounced a single up the middle to score the first two runs.

Christian Hallmark followed with a bouncer through the right side to make it 3-0.

In essence, the inning served as a microcosm of how the Roadrunners won the series against a perennial NCAA tournament team.

They laid off pitches out of the strike zone. They took the walks when they could and then capitalized with timely hitting.

“Really it’s just trusting your approach, trusting your eyes and just not trying to do too much,” Arquette said. “Get a pitch that you can handle, and if they don’t give it to you, take the free pass.

“Because,” he added, “we can hit. So we’re going to capitalize on pitchers’ mistakes.”

The Patriots out-hit the Roadrunners 10-9, the second time on the weekend that they had more hits than the home team and still lost.

Their problem stemmed from the disparity in walks and how the Roadrunners took advantage of it.

They Patriots issued eight free passes, compared to only three combined by Dove and Brown.

Four of the eight UTSA players who walked ended up scoring. DBU, by contrast, didn’t score with any of its three who reached via the base on ball.

Dove said he felt good and tried to just throw as many strikes as possible, and then let the defense do the work.

“And they played great (behind me) today,” said Dove, who struck out six batters and walked one.

In the fifth inning, the Patriots scored their first run of the game when Jake Bennett delivered an RBI double down the left field to make it 4-1.

Afterward, Hallmark came out to the mound to tell his starting pitcher that the next batter, Tryon, would be the last one he’d face.

But after Dove struck out Tryon, he signaled to the dugout that he’d like to pitch to the next batter, Krauss, the preseason Player of the Year in Conference USA.

Dove was granted his wish, and then he retired Krauss on a long fly ball to left.

“I thought I had him,” Dove said. “I wanted to compete against him. Thanks to coach Hallmark for letting me get the opportunity right there.”

Looking into looming challenges for the Roadrunners, the Bobcats in San Marcos and then the Astros Classic in Houston next weekend, Dove said there’s “definitely” more work to be done.

“We’re starting to figure out our identity a little bit,” he said. “But it’s going to be tested again on Tuesday and this weekend, and we’ll see how we handle it from there.”

Records

Dallas Baptist 4-3
UTSA 7-0

Coming up

UTSA at Texas State, Tuesday, 6 p.m.

Notable

The Patriots haven’t been swept in a three-game series since March 3-5 in 2023 when they lost three straight to the Southern Miss Golden Eagles in Hattiesburg.

Popoola scores 26 as the Tulsa men run away from UTSA, 100-74

Guard Ade Popoola exploded for 26 points and 10 rebounds Sunday, boosting the Tulsa Golden Hurricane to a 100-74 victory over the UTSA Roadrunners in American Conference men’s basketball.

Tulsa shot 54 percent from the field in moving into a tie for second place in the American. The Golden Hurricane rang up the third-most points against the last-place Roadrunners this season.

In the game played at the Reynolds Center in Tulsa, Okla., Jamir Simpson scored 20 and Dorian Hayes had 19 to lead UTSA. The Roadrunners have lost two straight and 19 of their last 20 games.

Records

UTSA 5-22, 1-14
Tulsa 22-6, 10-5

Coming up

East Carolina at UTSA, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Wichita State at UTSA, Sunday, 7 p.m.
UTSA at Rice, Sunday, March 8, 2 p.m.

Undefeated UTSA baseball off to a record 6-0 start after beating Dallas Baptist, 10-8

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Drew Detlefsen had four hits, including a two-run single in a six-run eighth inning, as the undefeated UTSA Roadrunners rallied on a windy day in San Antonio to defeat the Dallas Baptist Patriots, 10-8.

Coach Pat Hallmark’s team won its second straight in two days over the Patriots, a perennial NCAA tournament team, clinching the three-game series going into Sunday’s finale at Roadrunner Field.

The win also lifted Hallmark’s Roadrunners to a 6-0 record for the best start after six games in program history.

Dallas Baptist, a program that has advanced to 11 straight NCAA tournaments, scored two runs in the seventh and three more in the eighth to take a 7-4 lead.

From there, the Roadrunners capitalized on an ensuing Patriots’ bullpen meltdown in the bottom half to score six runs on four hits, four walks and a hit by pitch.

Leading by three runs going into the ninth, UTSA called on pitcher Mike DeBattista, who earned the save.

Battista gave up a one-out solo home run to Ryan Martin for the final run of the day, but after that, he retired two straight to secure the save, getting Landon Underhill on a grounder and Adam Burghult on a fly ball to right field.

UTSA’s momentum from a record-breaking, 47-15 season last year has become undeniable.

The Roadrunners, featuring a core of veterans who won the American Conference and NCAA Austin Regional titles a year ago, have started to play like they expect to win every day.

Detlefsen told ESPN on the postgame that the team felt confident going into the bottom of the eighth.

“This team is special,” said Detlefsen, who had two hits in the inning. “You can see it here, with a top team like DBU. (It’s a) respectable team, and we just battled. I can’t give enough praise to everyone. The fans. The players. Everyone that contributed to this win.”

In the series opener, the Patriots out-hit the Roadrunners by two, while both teams slugged three home runs. But the Roadrunners countered with pitching that didn’t walk a batter and a defense that didn’t make an error in 12-8 victory

UTSA wasn’t quite as clean on Saturday. The Roadrunners’ offense left 15 runners on base. The defense made two errors in the field, and the pitching walked seven.

But the pitching did have its moments, particularly a stretch of a few middle innings from reliever Conor Myles, and the hitting also came to life when it counted.

Down by three runs going into the bottom of the eighth, the Roadrunners sent 13 batters to the plate to stun the Patriots with six runs.

Detlefsen, one of the standouts on last year’s team, led off against DBU pitcher Athan Kroll with a single to right field.

Lane Haworth followed with his own single to right, putting runners at first and second. Kroll got the first out of the inning when Josh Arquette fouled off a pitch that was caught in front of the DBU dugout by Burghult, the catcher.

At that point, Hallmark got aggressive. He called for a double steal, and it worked, with Detlefsen taking third and Haworth pulling into second. At that juncture, Kroll started to falter, walking Christian Hallmark to load the bases.

Dallas Baptist coach Dan Heefner promptly countered by bringing in a new pitcher, a 6-foot-5, 255-pound righty named JT Long, to put out the fire.

Long looked imposing. He was throwing hard. Nevertheless, Jacob Silva greeted him with an RBI single for UTSA’s first run of the inning. With the bases still loaded, Long continued to struggle, hitting Diego Diaz with a pitch to force in a second run.

Hallmark maneuvered again, bringing in freshman Nathan Johnson to pinch hit, and Johnson responded with a long sacrifice fly ball to right for the second out. Nevertheless, another run scored to tie the game, 7-7.

After UTSA’s Jordan Ballin walked, Caden Miller stood in the box and worked the count to 3-2 against Long. He lashed a ball down the right field line that might have been a three-run extra-base hit, but it was barely foul.

Finally, Miller drew another bases-loaded walk to break the tie, lifting the Roadrunners into an 8-7 lead. With the crowd up and cheering and with the bases still loaded, Detlefsen stepped into the box for the second time.

He responded with a single through the left side, driving in two, and pushing UTSA’s lead to 10-7.

“I can’t lie,” Detlefsen told ESPN. “I was feeling nervous. With the adrenaline and all that. But once I got it to 2-0, I was looking for a pitch to hit, and on the ground, of course, with this wind.

“So, I just wanted to do damage. I got the pitch up (in the strike zone) and put it in play.”

In the end, UTSA outhit Dallas Baptist 13-7, with Detlefsen leading the way. He went four for six, scored twice and produced two RBIs. Silva and Haworth both had three hits in four at bats.

Records

Dallas Baptist 4-2
UTSA 6-0

Coming up

Dallas Baptist at UTSA, Sunday, 1 p.m.
UTSA at Texas State, Tuesday, 6 p.m.

Notable

Three years ago, the Patriots swept three games at Roadrunner Field to clinch the Conference USA title. After UTSA joined with the American, the two played again last year in Dallas, and the Patriots won the series, two games to one.

With those outcomes, DBU increased its overall head-to-head record to 8-1 against UTSA. Now, of course, the Roadrunners have trimmed that lead to 8-3, going into Sunday’s series finale.

Last season, both teams advanced to play in the NCAA tournament. While the Patriots were ousted in the Baton Rouge Regional, the Roadrunners swept to three straight wins to claim the Austin Regional title.

Included in the regional victory were two straight wins over the Texas Longhorns, who were the Southeastern Conference regular-season champions and the No. 2 overall seed in the tournament.

UTSA reached the Los Angeles Super Regional and lost two straight to 15th-seeded UCLA.

Last-place Wichita State women hold off UTSA, 62-61

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

The UTSA women’s basketball team traveled to Kansas to play the last-place Wichita State Shockers on Saturday, intent on generating momentum by picking up a victory in their fifth-to-last, regular-season game.

The Shockers had other ideas entirely, breaking open a close battle behind Jaila Harding in the third quarter and then holding on to defeat the defending conference champions, 62-61, at Koch Arena.

For the Roadrunners, it was a humbling experience, losing for the third time this season against a bottom-of-the-pack team in the American Conference.

It was also frustrating. They trailed by 10 with seven minutes remaining and made a furious charge that brought them to within one in the final 40 seconds.

After a Damara Allen basket pulled UTSA within the final score, the Roadrunners made a defensive stop. Going for the win, they pushed it up the court, with guard Ereauna Hardaway on the dribble.

When she dribbled into the key, Hardaway went up for the shot, but it was blocked by Jaida McDonald as time expired.

Harding, a graduate transfer from New Mexico State, led the Shockers with 19 points. She had 12 in the third quarter as her team started to take control of the game. Abby Cater scored 12 and Diamond Richardson 11.

Cheyenne Rowe, UTSA’s leading scorer, contributed 23 for the Roadrunners for her fourth effort in the 20s this season. In the end, it was Rowe leading the comeback, as she notched 12 in the fourth period.

Idara Udo had a double double with 10 points and 10 rebounds before fouling out in the fourth quarter.

The loss, UTSA’s second straight, left the Roadrunners (12-13, 7-7) in sixth place in the American. South Florida and North Texas (both 9-5) sit just ahead of UTSA in the standings.

Charlotte (6-7) is a half game behind going into a game scheduled later Saturday at North Texas.

Ten teams qualify for the American’s postseason event, with the tournament scheduled for March 10-14 in Birmingham. Teams seeded seventh through 10th must win five games in five days to win the title.

The fifth and sixth seeds get a first-round bye and a four-game route to the championship. Teams seeded third and fourth are rewarded with a double bye and can get the title and the NCAA automatic bid with three wins.

Records

UTSA 12-13, 7-7
Wichita State 6-21, 3-11

Coming up

UTSA at North Texas, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m.

First half

In the first half, UTSA played a more physical style and dominated in rebounding, 23-12. But Wichita State scored eight points off 18 turnovers. By intermission, the teams went into intermission tied, 24-24.

For the Roadrunners, forward Rowe led with seven points, while Udo scored six and pulled down nine rebounds. Harding scored seven points to lead the Shockers.

Forward Treasure Thompson scored five points in the half as the Shockers outscored the Roadrunners in bench points, 11-0.

First quarter

They Roadrunners didn’t play their best in the first quarter, but they did emerge with a 12-11 lead when forward Rowe hit a long jumper from the top of the key at the buzzer.

Forward Mia Hammonds contributed six points in the period, getting one bucket on a driving layup off the fast break and also hitting four for four at the free-throw line.

The Shockers played well defensively, holding the Roadrunners to four of 13 shooting from the field and forcing four turnovers. Jaila Harding had four points in the period.

Second quarter

Wichita State continued to play with aggression defensively, forcing a spate of turnovers in the first few minutes of the second quarter.

Later, UTSA went through a two-minute scoring drought.

When Harding and Diamond Richardson knocked down back-to-back three pointers, the Shockers had their largest lead of the game at 24-20. UTSA responded with tough play under the boards.

Offensive rebounds led to the Roadrunners’ last two baskets, one by Udo and the other by Rowe, to tie the score.

Third quarter

Harding hit three 3-point baskets and exploded for 12 points in the third period as Wichita State took control of the game, 49-40.

Playing big strong in the rebounding department, the Shockers outscored the Roadrunners, 25-16 in the quarter.

Near the end of the period, guard Diamond Richardson made plays on both ends of the floor to blunt UTSA’s momentum.

After foiling a breakaway layup, she emerged on the other to hit a layup for a four-point swing.

Notable

The Roadrunners have had difficult experiences in their past two games against teams in the bottom tier of the American Conference standings. On Jan. 23, UTSA lost 52-40 at the Memphis Tigers. On Feb. 3, UTSA fell 81-69 to the UAB Blazers in Birmingham.

UTSA will play at North Texas on Tuesday, facing a team that probably wants some payback. Cheyenne Rowe produced 27 points and 11 rebounds as the Roadrunners defeated the Mean Green 66-64 in San Antonio on Jan. 28.

UTSA downs Dallas Baptist 12-8 to stay undefeated

Sam Simmons. UTSA baseball beat Dallas Baptist 12-8 on Friday, Feb. 20, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA relief pitcher Sam Simmons showed his emotions after throwing 64 pitches in 4 and 2/3 innings of one-run relief. The senior from Manvel scattered seven hits, earned the victory and improved to 2-0. – Photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

In their first test against a quality program this season, the UTSA Roadrunners won the baseball game and passed the examination.

UTSA scored six runs in the first inning Friday night and then held on behind reliever Sam Simmons for a 12-8 victory over the Dallas Baptist Patriots at Roadrunner Field.

With the win, the Roadrunners beat a perennial NCAA tournament team, scored in double figures for the fifth straight game and remained undefeated at 5-0, matching the 2010 and 2013 teams for the fastest starts in program history.

Josh Arquette. UTSA baseball beat Dallas Baptist 12-8 on Friday, Feb. 20, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Josh Arquette smashed a three-run triple to spark UTSA’s six-run first inning. He also doubled in the fifth. – Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA will try to break the record Saturday afternoon in the second of three games this weekend against the Patriots, who fell to 4-1.

In their first four games, the Roadrunners won by a combined score of 53-13, so Coach Pat Hallmark said on the eve of this weekend’s series that he knew the Patriots would be the first to challenge them.

He was eager to discover how his team could respond to adversity.

“We found out we can handle getting punched, at least sometimes, and we’ll keep finding out,” Hallmark said. “I asked the guys to enjoy tonight — without partaking. But I asked them to wake up (Saturday) a little bit pissed off.

“I don’t want to be satisfied.”

Hallmark said that sort of attitude last spring at the NCAA Austin Regional helped immensely when the Roadrunners beat the Kansas State Wildcats in their opener for the program’s historic first playoff victory.

He told his players then not to let up. To keep playing with a purpose, and they did it, winning the next two nights against the Texas Longhorns to claim their first NCAA regional title.

“This (game, against Dallas Baptist) is just one game,” Hallmark said. “Everybody thought we hung the moon (after Kansas State last year). I’m happy tonight, but we didn’t hang the moon. We beat a good team. We’ve beat a good team before.

“We need to win again.”

Diego Diaz. UTSA baseball beat Dallas Baptist 12-8 on Friday, Feb. 20, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Diego Diaz jumps into a gaggle of his best friends after socking a two-run homer to cap a six-run first inning.- Photo by Joe Alexander

Dallas Baptist entered the season as one of only five programs in the nation to reach the NCAA tournament each of the last 11 years (excluding the 2020 Covid season).

The other four programs include Florida, LSU, Oklahoma State and Vanderbilt.

While some fans around the nation might not know about the Patriots’ prowess, the Roadrunners certainly do. Dallas Baptist entered the weekend 8-1 all time in baseball against UTSA.

Simmons (2-0) was still feeling the emotion about 30 minutes after it was over.

After hurling 4 and 2/3 innings of one-run relief to finish off the game and earn the victory, he was asked if it was all right for the media to call him the iron man, considering he threw 64 pitches.

“Yes sir, you can,” he said. “It was just a lot of fun. Games like that, as a player, are what you live for.”

Simmons entered with one out in the fifth inning, with UTSA leading 8-7. Dallas Baptist’s Ben Tryon had just cranked a three-run homer, prompting coaches to visit the mound and take the ball from UTSA starter Connor Kelley.

Simmons, who delivers his pitches both from the side and over the top, did not disappoint.

Facing his first two hitters, he yielded a loud single to Chayton Krauss and then another blast off the bat of Ryan Martin. Fortunately for Simmons and the Roadrunners, Martin’s ball sailed deep to center field, where Christian Hallmark turned, ran and made a running catch into the padded wall for the second out.

Andrew Stucky. UTSA baseball beat Dallas Baptist 12-8 on Friday, Feb. 20, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Andrew Stucky is greeted by Coach Pat Hallmark as he rounds third in the fifth inning following his two-run homer. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Landon Underhill followed with an infield single, putting two runners aboard and bringing up Dylan Cupp.

As it turned out, UTSA escaped the inning without another run scoring when UTSA shortstop Jordan Ballin snared Cupp’s ground ball deep in the hole and threw on multiple hops to first base for the third out.

Though the call was challenged, the umpires upheld it, one of several turning points in a crazy game.

As Patriots fans who made the trip to San Antonio groaned at the decision, Roadrunners fans cheered. They cheered even louder in UTSA’s next at bat as Andrew Stucky socked a two-run homer in the bottom half of the fifth to make it 10-7.

Drew Detlefsen followed with a two-run shot in the sixth for a 12-7 lead. In the top of the eighth, Simmons gave up a solo homer to slugger Adam Berghult as the Patriots trimmed the lead to 12-8.

But in the end, the 6-foot-4 righthander would yield only two more singles the rest of the way, finishing the game by fanning Berghult looking for the last out. The senior from Manvel gave up only one run on seven hits, while striking out four.

“Sam was great,” Hallmark said. “Kelley was good, too. I know the (statistics) line is not going to be good (for him) because he gave up some runs. But I’m proud of both of ’em. We didn’t walk a batter. That’s awesome against that team.

“It’s so, so important not to walk ’em.”

Drew Detlefsen. UTSA baseball beat Dallas Baptist 12-8 on Friday, Feb. 20, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Drew Detlefsen watches the ball sail over the left field wall for his first homer of the season in the sixth inning. It was a two-run blast that yielded a 12-7 lead for the Roadrunners. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Kelley, a late-innings reliever last year, worked the first four and a third innings. Though he gave up two home runs among seven hits and seven runs, he also struck out seven and worked hard into the fifth inning.

That, in itself, was important for the Roadrunners. UTSA will need that from Kelley with ace Robert Orloski battling a shoulder injury. Orloski hurt his arm on opening day after throwing only 23 pitches.

Hallmark said he doesn’t know when he will be able to return but added that it won’t be soon.

Offensively, UTSA cranked out 10 hits, including three home runs, a double and a triple. The homers came from Diego Diaz, Stucky and Detlefsen. Josh Arquette stroked two extra-base hits and had three RBIs.

Diaz and Detlefsen also had a pair of hits and two RBIs apiece.

In the first inning, the Roadrunners erupted, with Arquette sparking the six-run uprising with a three-run triple.

Diaz capped the outburst with his second home run of the season, a two-run blast to right that chased Patriots starter Russ Smith, who took the loss and fell to 1-1.

Smith entered the season as a highly-regarded prospect from Cowley College, where he was 9-1. The righthander won on opening night for the Patriots, allowing two runs on two hits in four innings against Binghamton (N.Y.)

Against the Roadrunners, he couldn’t find the plate, walking three and giving up three hits, with the last one sent soaring 397 feet into an overcast sky by Diaz.

“Everybody’s going to want to talk about the hitting and about Sam, and we should,” Hallmark said. “The hitting and Sam were really good. But Kelley was a grown up tonight. To handle adversity like he did, I’m proud of him.”

Records

Dallas Baptist 4-1
UTSA 5-0

Dallas Baptist coach Dan Heefner. UTSA baseball beat Dallas Baptist 12-8 on Friday, Feb. 20, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Dallas Baptist coach Dan Heefner has led the Patriots to 11 straight NCAA tournaments. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Coming up

Dallas Baptist at UTSA, Saturday, 2 p.m.
Dallas Baptist at UTSA, Sunday, 1 p.m.
UTSA at Texas State, Tuesday, 6 p.m.

Notable

The Dallas Baptist Patriots hit .353 as a team with six home runs in their first four games, including four by Jake Bennett.

Bennett went one for three with two runs scored and an RBI. But UTSA struck him out twice, once in the first inning by Connor Kelley and again in the eighth by Sam Simmons.

DBU cranked out 12 hits, including three homers.

Hitting the ball out of the park for the Patriots were Chayton Krauss in the third inning and Ben Tryon in the fifth, both off Kelley, and also Adam Berghult in the eighth off Sam Simmons.

Four free passes issued by Dallas Baptist pitching turned into UTSA runs. Three of the first four Roadrunners who walked ended up crossing the plate and, later, the second of two batters hit by pitches also scored.

UTSA pitching didn’t walk a batter, but it did put three runners on base via the hit by pitch. Only one of those Dallas Baptist base runners scored.

After plunking two straight batters in the sixth, UTSA’s Simmons fell behind Tryon 3-0 in the count, only to rally and register a strikeout on an overhand breaking pitch.

On Saturday, Jared Schaeffer (1-0, 0.00) is expected to start for Dallas Baptist, but for UTSA, it’s an unknown as coach Pat Hallmark said he remains undecided.

Ryan Borberg (0-0, 40.50) is expected to start for the Patriots on Sunday against Roadrunners’ righty Kendall Dove (1-0, 0.00).

Sam Simmons. UTSA baseball beat Dallas Baptist 12-8 on Friday, Feb. 20, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA relief pitcher Sam Simmons delivers the ball from the side and also from over the top. He’s worked 9 and 2/3 innings this season, giving up one run on eight hits. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Mid-major baseball showdown: UTSA and Dallas Baptist are both 4-0 entering weekend series

Update
Pitching matchups for the weekend are as follows:
Friday – Russ Smith (1-0, 4.50) for Dallas Baptist vs. UTSA’s Connor Kelley (0-0, 6.00)
Saturday – Jared Schaeffer (1-0, 0.00) for Dallas Baptist vs. TBA
Sunday – Ryan Borberg (0-0, 40.50) for Dallas Baptist vs UTSA’s Kendall Dove (1-0, 0.00)

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

UTSA baseball will host the Dallas Baptist Patriots in a three-game series starting Friday afternoon at Roadrunner Field. First pitch between the undefeated mid-major powers is set for 4 p.m.

Christian Hallmark. UTSA beat South Dakota State 17-4 in the Roadrunners' 2026 baseball season opener on Friday, Feb. 13, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Sophomore outfielder Christian Hallmark is batting .625 and has been on base nine times in the team’s first four games. – File photo by Joe Alexander

Both the Roadrunners and the Patriots made NCAA tournament appearances last season and enter the second weekend of the new campaign with potent offenses and 4-0 records.

It’s the fifth straight home game for the Roadrunners, who swept three games from South Dakota State before winning a mid-week game Tuesday against the University of Illinois-Chicago.

Led by Caden Miller, Josh Arquette and Christian Hallmark, UTSA has hit .399 as a team while scoring 53 runs as it attempts to tie the school record for consecutive victories to start a season.

The Patriots, meanwhile, have scored 45 runs while hitting .353 as a team in sweeping three from Binghamton and one from Abilene Christian.

Dallas Baptist boasts five players batting .400 or better, led by Adam Berghult, Jake Bennett and Ryan Martin, in addition to Dylan Cupp and Cooper Neville.

Bennett has hit four home runs, including two in a game against Binghamton and two against Abilene Christian.

Records

Dallas Baptist 4-0
UTSA 4-0

Coming up

Dallas Baptist at UTSA, Friday, 4 p.m.
Dallas Baptist at UTSA, Saturday, 2 p.m.
Dallas Baptist at UTSA, Sunday, 1 p.m.
UTSA at Texas State, Tuesday, 6 p.m.

Notable

Injuries have hit two of UTSA’s best players thus far, as the team has lost both infielder Nathan Hodge and pitcher Robert Orloski.

Both players contributed heavily in last year’s 47-15 season, which included titles in both the American Conference regular season and the NCAA Austin Regional.

UTSA eventually reached the Los Angeles Super Regional — its first trip to the Super Regional round — where it was eliminated by UCLA.

Dallas Baptist won two of three from UTSA last season in Dallas.

The Patriots went on to win the Conference USA regular-season championship and finished 41-18 after getting eliminated at the NCAA Baton Rouge Regional. It was DBU’s third straight 40-win season and its 11th straight NCAA trip.

Dallas Baptist baseball is embarking on its last season in Conference USA before moving into the re-formed Pac 12 in 2027.

The Pac 12 will include Dallas Baptist, Fresno State, Gonzaga, Oregon State, San Diego State, Texas State and Washington State as the seven baseball-playing members.

Last-place UTSA falls out of contention for conference tournament bid after loss to FAU

Florida Atlantic's Isaiah Elohim (2), UTSA's Kaidon Rayfield and Florida Atlantic's Josiah Parker (11). Florida Atlantic beat UTSA 60-52 in American Conference men's basketball on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

FAU’s Isaiah Elohim (left) and Josiah Parker (right) battle under the boards against UTSA’s Kaidon Rayfield Wednesday night at the Convocation Center. – Photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

There will be no March Madness for the UTSA Roadrunners.

Center Devin Williams set the tone defensively in the first half, and Josiah Parker, Isaiah Elohim and Kanaan Carlyle led a second-half surge for the FAU Owls, who defeated the Roadrunners 60-52 Wednesday night at the Convocation Center.

With the loss, last-place UTSA was officially eliminated from contention for a berth in the American Conference men’s basketball postseason tournament.

Roadrunners coach Austin Claunch acknowledged his disappointment in falling short of the 10-team tournament, which will be played from March 11-15 in Birmingham at Legacy Arena.

Baboucarr Njie. Florida Atlantic beat UTSA 60-52 in American Conference men's basketball on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA sophomore Baboucarr Njie finished with a team-high 21 points and eight rebounds. He hit nine of 13 shots from the field. – Photo by Joe Alexander

But, in a sense, it was a predictable outcome once he started losing the services of key players over the last few months.

On most nights recently, the Roadrunners were missing either five, six or even seven players. Coming into the FAU game, Claunch’s team had played two straight road games with only eight players active, including only six on scholarship.

Regardless, the Roadrunners found the resolve to break a program-record, 17-game losing streak on Sunday afternoon, winning 88-79 on the road against the Charlotte 49ers.

But back at home in the Convocation Center, with nine players active, UTSA couldn’t get the offense moving and lost for the second time this season against FAU, the visiting team from Boca Raton, Fla.

As a result, the Roadrunners’ record fell to 5-21 overall and to 1-13 in a 13-team conference, with four games to play.

“I’m disappointed with the overall record,” Claunch said. “But you’re not going to see us tank. You’re not going to see us fold. I was proud of our fight tonight, and we’ll continue this in our last four.”

FAU, at 15-12 and 7-7, now has some hope for a strong finish and a push into the tournament at Birmingham.

Florida Atlantic coach John Jakus. Florida Atlantic beat UTSA 60-52 in American Conference men's basketball on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

The FAU Owls, led by coach John Jakus, held the Roadrunners to 30 percent shooting and snapped a six-game losing streak. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Parker, a 6-foot-7 FAU freshman guard, helped the visitors snap a six-game losing streak with 16 points and 13 rebounds. He had 10 points and seven boards after intermission. Elohim, another physical player in the Owls’ backcourt, scored 15 points.

Carlyle, the Owls’ point guard, had 12 points, six rebounds and a team-leading five assists.

Williams, meanwhile, was a problem for the Roadrunners’ most of the night. In the first half, the 6-10 redshirt sophomore had four of his team-high seven blocked shots and always seemed to be lurking around the basket to cut off UTSA drives.

“The fact that he did that early,” FAU coach John Jakus said, “I think they were looking around (for him) at the end.” In the end, Williams also finished with 11 rebounds and eight points.

For the game, both defenses played hard and physical in the paint and on the perimeter, and it showed in the final statistics.

Playing without leading scorer Devin Vanterpool, FAU shot only 36.7 percent for the game, far below its season average of 46 percent. UTSA, in turn, mustered only 30.8 percent.

The Roadrunners, attacking the rim most of the night to compensate for six of 26 three-point accuracy, missed numerous times at close range. UTSA leading scorer Jamir Simpson misfired regularly from close range and finished three for 18 from the field.

Multiple times, it seemed Simpson crashed head-long into heavy traffic inside without a foul being called either way.

That being said, Simpson was not alone in his struggles. Outside of sophomore Baboucarr Njie, nobody else in a home team jersey could really find the range in shooting the basketball. Njie, who hit nine of 13 from the field, carried the Roadrunners with 21 points and eight rebounds. Simpson scored nine.

Jamir Simpson. Florida Atlantic beat UTSA 60-52 in American Conference men's basketball on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA’s Jamir Simpson had a tough night with nine points on three of 18 shooting from the field. Simpson leads the Roadrunners with 15.8 points per game. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Brent Moss, averaging 15 points per game over his last seven, was held to six points on two of eight shooting.

Guard Dorian Hayes, returning to play after sitting out the last four games with a shoulder injury, scored one point in 11 minutes. He finished zero for three, all on three-point attempts.

Point guard Austin Nunez sat out his third straight game after landing hard under the basket during the last few minutes of a game against the North Texas Mean Green.

Records

FAU 15-12, 7-7
UTSA 5-21, 1-13

Coming up

UTSA at Tulsa, Sunday, 3 p.m.

Notable

A spokesman in the American Conference office e-mailed earlier Wednesday to confirm that an FAU victory would knock UTSA out of contention for the tournament.

Dorian Hayes. Florida Atlantic beat UTSA 60-52 in American Conference men's basketball on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA freshman Dorian Hayes played his first game since Jan. 28. He came off the bench with one point in 11 minutes. – Photo by Joe Alexander

A UTSA spokesman said before tipoff that the Roadrunners needed to beat FAU and then needed to win all of their remaining games to have a chance at qualifying for the American tournament.

Ultimately, a second straight regular-season victory was not in the cards, and instead the Roadrunners dropped their ninth straight home game.

Now 2-10 at home, 2-10 on the road and 1-1 on neutral sites, the Roadrunners are looking only to finish strong in the last few weeks.

UTSA completes its schedule with four games, two at home and two on the road.

The trek starts Sunday in a road game at Tulsa (21-6, 9-5). It continues with two straight home against East Carolina on Feb. 25 and against Wichita State on March 1. The Roadrunners’ 45th season is scheduled to close on the road on March 8 at Rice.

FAU played without leading scorer Devin Vanterpool. Vanterpool, averaging 15.8 points per game, had scored 26 in the Owls loss Sunday at home against the South Florida Bulls. He scored 21 in a 110-70 victory over the Roadrunners on New Years Eve in Boca Raton.

First half

In a first half that featured 11 lead changes and three ties, the Roadrunners emerged with a 28-26 lead.

Aggressive defense and poor shooting by both teams led to a sub-par game on the offensive end.

UTSA held FAU to 30 percent from the field. FAU came into the game second in the conference, shooting 46 percent.

The Roadrunners also struggled, hitting only 36 percent.

Njie led the Roadrunners with 10 points and five of six shooting. The 6-foot-6 guard/forward also had six rebounds, including two on the offensive end.

Elohim paced the Owls with seven points, including five in the last six minutes of the half.

Brent Moss. Florida Atlantic beat UTSA 60-52 in American Conference men's basketball on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026, at the Convocation Center. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Starting guard Brent Moss was held to six points on two for eight shooting. Moss had averaged 15.5 over the last seven games. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Update: FAU’s leading scorer won’t play tonight at UTSA

Update: FAU guard Devin Vanterpool will not play Wednesday night at UTSA. Vanterpool’s status was unveiled on the player availability report issued a few hours before tipoff at the Convocation Center.

Vanterpool averages a team-leading 15.8 points per game. He scored 21 in FAU’s 110-70 victory over UTSA on New Year’s Eve in Florida and had 26 Sunday in an FAU loss to South Florida.

For UTSA, player availability remains unchanged from Sunday’s game at Charlotte. Austin Rivers (knee) and Mo Njie (broken finger) are out, with Dorian Hayes (shoulder) listed as questionable.

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

After nearly three months of frustration, the UTSA Roadrunners discovered the secret of winning on Sunday afternoon in Charlotte, N.C.

They fell behind by 13 points with eight minutes left against the Charlotte 49ers, but instead of folding, they seized momentum and won 88-79 to snap a 17-game losing streak.

The Roadrunners will try to keep the feeling alive on Wednesday when they face the slumping Florida Atlantic University Owls at 7 p.m. at the Convocation Center.

UTSA also needs to win to keep its season alive. An FAU victory will eliminate the Roadrunners from consideration for the American Conference tournament.

FAU soundly beat UTSA 110-70 in Florida on New Year’s Eve, the start of a streak in which the Owls won six of their first seven in American Conference play.

Leading into the rematch, the Owls are struggling with injuries and a six-game losing streak, after falling on Sunday, 83-81 in overtime, to the South Florida Bulls.

FAU enters the game Wednesday at 14-12 overall and 6-7 in the conference, compared to last-place UTSA at 5-20 and 1-12.

“Really, really good offensive team,” UTSA coach Austin Claunch said. “They play the fastest tempo in the league. They’ve lost a couple in a row. They’ve had some injuries and some close games. Lost an overtime game (Sunday).

“There’s a lot of firepower there. We’ve got to be clear on personnel. You know, we’ve been mixing up defenses a little bit, and I think that’s been OK for us. But (against Charlotte) our offense really pushed us.

“The defense obviously came alive there and we made some really tough plays. We rebounded and turned them over. That’s got to continue to be a theme for us, you know, finding ways to disrupt Florida Atlantic.”

The Owls enter the rematch against the Roadrunners as the No. 3 scoring team in the league (81 points) and No. 2 in field goal percentage (46.3).

“They’re going to score,” Claunch said. “They’re going to make some shots. But obviously we’ve got to find ways to impact the ball, get deflections and get steals, so that we’re also creating easy offense for us.”

Records

FAU 14-12, 6-7
UTSA 5-20, 1-12

Coming up

FAU at UTSA, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
UTSA at Tulsa, Sunday, 3 p.m.

Notable

Just as UTSA finds itself on the verge of elimination from conference tournament consideration, the Roadrunners’ offense is finding a rhythm.

The offense is averaging 76.5 points on 45.3 percent shooting in its last four games. UTSA is also hitting 36 percent from three in that stretch.

For the season, UTSA ranks last in the American in scoring (69.6 points) and last in field goal percentage (39.9). The Roadrunners are 11th out of 13 teams in 3-point percentage (29.2).

The American tournament will be held in Birmingham this season. Only 10 teams will make it. As of today, both FAU and North Texas, with 6-7 league records, are tied for ninth in the standings.

The Roadrunners are five games out of the last spot with five to play.

UTSA junior guard/forward Brent Moss has averaged 15.8 points, 6.1 rebounds and 1.4 steals over the last seven games.

In that span, he has scored in double figures six times and has shot 44.9 percent from the field and 42.5 percent from the 3-point line.

Included in the streak is a season-high, 32-point game at South Florida on Feb. 4. Moss had 16 points and six rebounds at Charlotte.

UTSA will have only eight or nine players available for FAU.

The eight definitely available will include Jamir Simpson, Brent Moss, LJ Brown and Baboucarr Njie in the backcourt or on the wings and Kaidon Rayfield, Daniel Akitoby, Matheo Coffi and Jackson Fazande at forward.

Guard Dorian Hayes is questionable with a shoulder injury but was warming up on the court, shooting threes, with about an hour remaining before tipoff. Hayes has sat out the last four games.

“We’re banged up but we’re not short of guys who want to get out here and play,” UTSA coach Austin Claunch said.

UTSA men’s basketball snaps its 17-game losing streak

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

The UTSA Roadrunners on Sunday erased a 13-point deficit in the last eight minutes and toppled the Charlotte 49ers, 88-79, snapping a program record 17-game losing streak.

Playing on the road against one of the leaders in the American Conference, the Roadrunners outscored the 49ers 31-9 down the stretch to win their first game since late November.

UTSA hadn’t won since Nov. 25 when it defeated Georgia Southern in Jacksonville, Fla.

Entering the game at Charlotte, the Roadrunners had the third longest active losing streak in the nation behind only Mississippi Valley State (23) and Air Force (18).

Now, they can breathe easier after a remarkable rally that yielded only their fifth win of the season against 20 losses.

“Just incredible fight by these young men,” UTSA coach Austin Claunch told Andy Everett on the team’s radio broadcast.

During the rally, Claunch was shown on television exhorting his players, slapping his hands on the floor after made baskets as they ran back on defense.

UTSA played short-handed with only eight active players. Only seven played in the game.

“I’m at a loss for words,” Claunch said. “It’s an incredible seven guys, you know. A couple of walk-ons and guys just gritty. A gritty, tough win against a really good team, and they made it hard on us.

“I’m just really proud. Not a lot to say. It’s been a long road and we still got a long road. It’s one win. But, um, we’re going to go clip a couple more of these other ones to finish and make sure we’re headed the right way.”

Jamir Simpson led the way for the Roadrunners. The senior guard from Ohio scored 15 of his 20 points in the second half to lead six UTSA players in double figures.

Simpson also pulled down a team-high eight rebounds and passed for seven assists.

At the end of a 20-0 run, Simpson scored back-to-back buckets, one on a drive against a 7-foot-2 center and another on a put back that boosted UTSA into a 77-70 lead with 2:45 remaining.

In the second half, guarded as the focal point of the Roadrunners’ offense by the 49ers, he connected on four of seven from the field and seven of eight from the free throw line.

Brent Moss and Baboucarr Njie scored 16 points apiece, while Daniel Akitoby contributed 12 and Matheo Coffi 10.

Guard Ben Bradford led the 49ers with 20 points and 12 rebounds. Major Freeman scored 13 and Damoni Harrison 11. Guard Dezayne Mingo, one of Charlotte’s leading scorers, was held to seven points.

Records

UTSA 5-20, 1-12
Charlotte 13-12, 7-5

Coming up

FAU at UTSA, Wednesday, 7 p.m.

Notable

Walkon guard LJ Brown, the son of program great Devin Brown, started his first game of the season and made a major contribution during the rally.

Brown, from San Antonio’s Johnson High School, nailed a long three-pointer that gave UTSA the lead, 73-70, with 3:56 remaining. It was the first lead in the game for the Roadrunners since the 6:04 mark of the first half.

Coming into the day, UTSA had six players listed as out for the game or out for the season. One of them was Austin Nunez, the starting point, who was listed as out for the game. He sat out his second game in a row.

Guard Dorian Hayes, nursing a shoulder injury, was listed as questionable on the player availability report. He hasn’t played since Jan. 28 against UAB and has sat out four straight.

Coming into Sunday, the 49ers had lost two straight games, both on the road, falling at Wichita State and Memphis. Charlotte is one of the surprises in American men’s basketball this season, rebounding from a 11-22, 3-15 record a year ago.

First half

Bradford propelled the 49ers to a 44-38 halftime lead with a 12-point, 10-rebound double double.

UTSA, with only eight players active, did well in the early going by forging a five-point lead after 11 minutes.

Kaidon Rayfield sank a three with 10:54 remaining to push UTSA into a 21-16 advantage.

From there, Charlotte retaliated immediately with a put back by forward Raul Villar and a three by Damoni Harrison.

Daniel Akitoby responded with two straight baskets, forging a 25-24 lead for UTSA with 8:25 remaining. Two minutes later, Baboucarr Njie sank a free throw as the Roadrunners continued to lead by one.

But in the last six minutes, the 49ers outscored the Roadrunners 15-8 to take control going into intermission. Bradford took over in the run with seven points, including a long three.

South Florida women win 69-63 to sweep season series from UTSA

Ereauna Hardaway. South Florida beat UTSA 69-63 in American Conference women's basketball on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Guard Ereauna Hardaway shrugged off her 17-point, 8-assist performance, noting, “We didn’t win. Winning is all that matters to me.’ – Photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Carla Brito and the South Florida Bulls controlled the action in the middle quarters Saturday night and held on at the end for a 69-63 road victory over the UTSA Roadrunners in American Conference women’s basketball.

Katie Davidson and Edyn Battle scored 17 points apiece and Brito produced her fourth straight double double (with 13 points and 12 rebounds) as the Bulls moved into sole possession of third place in the American.

Taking a big step toward securing a top-four finish and a double-bye into the postseason tournament, South Florida (16-10 overall and 9-4 in the American) also established an edge over sixth-place UTSA (12-12, 7-6).

South Florida's Katie Davidson. South Florida beat UTSA 69-63 in American Conference women's basketball on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. - Photo by Joe Alexander

South Florida guard Katie Davidson scored 10 of her 17 points in the second quarter, when the Bulls started to pull away from the Roadrunners. – Photo by Joe Alexander

The edge for the Bulls came in knowing that they are now 2-0 against the defending conference champions this season.

Last month, on Jan. 13 in Tampa, Fla., the Bulls built a 25-point halftime lead en route to a 70-53 victory over the Roadrunners.

In the first game, they knocked down 10 threes. On Saturday, they made only three, but they also shot 50.9 percent from the floor to compensate.

UTSA couldn’t keep up with that accuracy, as the Roadrunners hit only 31.9 percent on 23 of 74 shooting. The Bulls shut down Roadrunners forward Cheyenne Rowe, holding her to 10 points on five of 17.

“It was a hard-fought game,” UTSA coach Karen Aston said. “The difference was their transition game and their ability to get easier shots than what we were able to get.

“I thought we had to work extremely hard for every shot opportunity and bucket we got. On the other end of that, I thought they got a ton of easy buckets in transition.”

Ereauna Hardaway led UTSA with 17 points and eight assists. In addition, UTSA forward Idara Udo contributed 15 points and 12 rebounds. In the second quarter, Udo snared a rebound that gave her 500 for her UTSA career.

Down by two after the opening period, the Bulls rode the hot shooting of Davidson into a 33-26 halftime lead.

After the Roadrunners made a push after halftime, the Bulls outscored them 11-5 at the end of the third quarter, with Brito hitting two baskets in the surge.

Idara Udo and Katie Davidson. South Florida beat UTSA 69-63 in American Conference women's basketball on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA forward Idara Udo contributed 15 points and 12 rebounds. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Down by 12 going into the fourth, the cold-shooting Roadrunners couldn’t get any closer than double digits until the last two minutes of the game.

Hardaway capped a frantic late push with a three-pointer with 34.7 seconds left. When the shot swished, it sliced the South Florida lead to four points.

But after a timeout, the Bulls inbounded and worked 17 seconds off the clock before Battle was fouled. She sank the ensuing two free throws, plus two more with 6.7 seconds remaining, to secure the victory.

In the UTSA postgame news conference, Hardaway was asked about her own performance. She shrugged and noted, “We didn’t win. Winning’s all that matters to me.”

Udo was asked about UTSA’s run on South Florida that made it so close at the end. Specifically, whether the late push could give them confidence to beat the Bulls in the postseason tournament in a possible third matchup.

“It does,” she said. “But I don’t even think it’s about the runs. Like coach said, their transition games were killers. If we stop their transition game and contain (them) at the beginning of the game, it would have been a different outcome.

“I don’t think we’d have even needed to go on a run at the end of the game. I have a lot of confidence in our defense and our execution on the offensive side. So I think when we put both of those together, that’ll be good for us.”

Aston said if there is a third matchup with the Bulls, then the Roadrunners will have made a deep run in the tournament, and she said she’d be happy with that.

Comments that followed from the coach were delivered, with some passion, in regard to what needs to happen with her team moving forward.

Karen Aston. South Florida beat UTSA 69-63 in American Conference women's basketball on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Coach Karen Aston said she’d be happy for a third meeting against the Bulls this season because that would likely mean her Roadrunners would be deep in the American Conference tournament bracket. – Photo by Joe Alexander

“There were times tonight when I didn’t think we were as competitive as we needed to be,” Aston said. “Because, when you play a team like South Florida, that transitions the way they do, you can’t even pause. You can’t take a break and feel sorry for yourself because something didn’t go right.

“It’s play to play. High-level games are supposed to be like that. But when you look at the stat sheet (tonight), we got more shot attempts. We beat ’em on the three-point line. We beat ’em on the free-throw line. We beat ’em in rebounding. And they turned the ball over more than we did.”

At that point, she drew a contrast in what happened Saturday night on UTSA’s home court, as compared to the earlier meeting in Florida.

“We got our ass kicked in Tampa,” she said. “And, as to Ereauna’s credit for noticing, the difference in the game (tonight) was that the ball went in the basket more for them, and I understand why. That was (their) transition, and we’ll have to figure out how to slow that down if we have to play ’em again.

“But, we got whipped in every category in Tampa. So, I’m extremely pleased with the progress we’ve made. We just got to get back to work. We got games to win. We got to get in the tournament.”

UTSA will have five more games remaining to clinch a spot in the 10-team tournament, which is scheduled March 10-14 in Birmingham, Ala.

Records

South Florida 16-10, 9-4
UTSA 12-12, 7-6

Coming up

UTSA at Wichita State, Feb. 21, 1 p.m.

Notable

South Florida pushed the pace at every opportunity, outscoring UTSA 25-4 in fast break points.

UTSA junior Idara Udo became the 18th player in program history to reach 500 and the first since Elyssa Coleman in 2024.

Additionally, Udo also became the fourth UTSA player to record double-digit offensive rebounds in a game — she had 10 against the Bulls — and the first since Tesha Smith set the program record with 12 in 2017.

First half

The Bulls turned up the intensity and rallied from down two after the first quarter to a 12-point lead late in the second.

UTSA, in turn, rallied in the last two minutes on a 7-0 run to cut into the deficit. But the damage had been done, and the Bulls went into the dressing room at intermission with a 33-26 lead.

For South Florida, Davidson led the charge in the second period when she scored 10 of her 12 first-half points.

South Florida's Carla Brito. South Florida beat UTSA 69-63 in American Conference women's basketball on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. - Photo by Joe Alexander

South Florida’s Carla Brito produced 13 points and 12 rebounds for her fourth consecutive double double. – Photo by Joe Alexander